48 (. lDunded in the rrign Df the gODd I lueen Anne Not even the ladies of Queen Anne's court were given to the use of toilet soap when Alexander Gibbs started his soap work in London in 1712. But vision has been rewarded and today Gibbs Cold Cream Soap is used by lovely ladies throughout the world. Ð,lLgllS I SDtJ EST. 1712 2S AND 40ë THE TABLE' go dead lame or break down on the hard Squadron A arena. I've seen a number going decidedly sore at the end of a chukker, but perhaps they cooled out all right, being of coarser stuff than the pampered animals you see at Meadow Brook. Still, the field must have the consistency of macadam after the tractor .has been over it so often in the course of a season's play. AKNUSTI, the best-turned-out team n in the tournament, their colors being the Gerry racing silks, beat Jim- my Mills' Westbury side easily enough, by 5 -1, in the semifinal earlier in the week. Westbury seemed rather at sea in spite of intensive practice with the Yale team. It takes more than a few days when one man has been playing outdoors in California, and another in Florida, all winter. At that, the only goal for Westbury was scored by George Oliver, who has played hardly at all this season. ONE of the grooms assured me that mishaps always run in threes. In the Aknusti- Westbury match, T er- rence Preece was slammed so hard against the knee boards that he'll be out of the saddle for weeks, and in the Boulder Brook-Winged Foot game, a similar, but more painful, thing hap- pened to Jack Fink. The third mis- adventure - a fatality - stopped the finals of the junior tournament at Squadron C in Brooklyn last weekend. Eckford Rufner, playing No.1 for the Ridgewood Riding Club, was thrown and his pony fell on him in the second chukker of the match with P .M.C. BEHIND THE KNEEBOARDS: The cheering section of the New York Athletic Club. . . . The impromptu hospital squad. . . . The annoyance of the referee when somebody tossed an extra ball in, and the teams split up and started playing both. . . . And I won- der why the north side of the arena is more popular. -H. T. . CAPT AIN'S DINNER. Funny How a paper cap Turns a man Into a sap. Now To find a cap That can Turn a sap Into a man. -MILDRED WESTON 7 4 \ ,.::.;: ' '., .....,. Chic Coíff re i:#!:1 for Easter Bonnet . . . . our fashion sleuths report to us the trend in coiffures at Paris open ings and at Palm Beach's smart gatherings . . . . so we invite you to place your head in the hands of our skiUed, artistic staff and have a coiffure as chic and individual as your new spring chapeau . . . . . for our staff knows whether you should have curls or no curls, a high or low hairdress. Ours is that deft touch - the difference between an ordinary coiffure and one that IS outstanding. \V/ckersham 2.8650 , 1ñ c Gvn" I 51.7 Madison Avenue, N. Y. Co. A CHIROPODIST IN ATTENDANCE :-':-: ""::' Jèoom 26-8></3 /ltcludÙ,-9' tjall.ery, --I :::' · 0'1 J;Jre.ssing : :,:):: II 7(dcJu!n (o'. .Jè-<J<H1V : ";,:, o:er il - I '.'..:..... ,. .', REf. iii - ), .':W THIS UNUSUAL HOTEL SUITE with la rge dropped living room, concealed gallery beds, dress- ing room and complete kitchen from $6 daily Same rate for one or two persons ALSO LARGER SUITES Sþecial l\fonthly Rates RESTAURAN'T Mallage1lletlt DcuglasL.EllimanEi CD. INC